Bergdahl blamed for deaths of US soldiers in Afghanistan

United States Army soldiers who served in Afghanistan alongside former prisoner of war Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl are speaking up to condemn their one-time colleague and those who are labeling him a hero following his release from Taliban custody this week.

Republican lawmakers were quick to pounce on the White House over
a recent under-the-table arrangement that relinquished five
Guantanamo Bay detainees in exchange for Bergdahl, a 28-year-old
soldier caught by the Taliban in 2009. Others are now voicing
their outrage too, including many soldiers who say that Bergdahl
willingly deserted the US Army five years ago and indirectly
caused the deaths of a half-dozen American troops as a result.

One of the more vocal critics of the just released soldier is
Nathan Bradley Bethea, who told The Daily Beast this week that he served in
same battalion as Bethea at the time he went missing in June
2009.

For the last five years, Bethea wrote, the Army has ordered that
the circumstances surrounding Bergdahl’s disappearance be kept
quiet. Upon his release on Saturday in exchange for five Gitmo
detainees, however, Bethea told the Beast that “now it is
time to speak the truth.’’

“Bergdahl was a deserter,” he wrote in an op-ed
published on Monday, “and soldiers from his own unit died
trying to track him down.”

According to Bethea, Bergdahl did not “lag behind on a
patrol” as cited in news reports five years ago. Instead, he
wrote, Bergdahl stayed awake one night and then fled their
outpost in the city of Sharana on foot.

“He deserted,” Bethea insists. “I’ve talked to
members of Bergdahl’s platoon — including the last Americans to
see him before his capture. I’ve reviewed the relevant documents.
That’s what happened.”

What also occurred, Bethea wrote in the op-ed, is that American
lives were lost in the days following Bergdah’s disappearance as
US soldiers searched through warzones heavily concentrated with
insurgents, and military resources were diverted towards finding
the missing troop, and not the enemy,

“On August 18, an IED killed Private First Class Morris
Walker and Staff Sergeant Clayton Bowen during a reconnaissance
mission. On August 26, while conducting a search for a Taliban
shadow sub-governor supposedly affiliated with Bergdahl’s
captors,Staff Sergeant Kurt Curtiss was shot in the face and
killed. On September 4, during a patrol to a village near the
area in which Bergdahl vanished, an insurgent ambush killed
Second Lieutenant Darryn Andrews and gravely wounded Private
First Class Matthew Martinek, who died of his wounds a week
later. On September 5, while conducting a foot movement toward a
village also thought affiliated with Bergdahl’s captors,Staff
Sergeant Michael Murphrey stepped on an improvised land mine. He
died the next day.”

Others who served in Afghanistan have corroborated those claims.

“I was pissed off then and I am even more so now with
everything going on,” former Sergeant Matt Vierkant, a
member of Bergdahl’s platoon during that time in 2009, told CNN.
“Bowe Bergdahl deserted during a time of war and his fellow
Americans lost their lives searching for him.”

“He walked off,” acknowledged former Pfc. Jose Baggett,
the New York Post reported this week. “He left his guard
post. Nobody knows if he defected or he’s a traitor or he was
kidnapped. What I do know is he was there to protect us and
instead he decided to defer from America and go and do his own
thing. I don’t know why he decided to do that, but we spend so
much of our resources and some of those resources were soldiers’
lives.”

Bergdahl was reportedly moved to a hospital in Germany after
being released by the Taliban over the weekend, and is expected
to soon return to the US. When it gets there, though, some of his
former colleagues say he should be held responsible.

“I’m pleased to see him returned safely,” his former
squad leader, Greg Leatherman, told CNN. “From experience I
hope that he receives adequate reintegration counseling. I
believe that an investigation should take place as soon as
healthcare professionals deem him fit to endure one.”

According to CNN, a senior Pentagon official said charges are not
likely.

“Five years is enough,” the source told the network.

As a number of prominent Republicans condemned the trade, more
light has been cast on the Guantanamo detainees who were
transferred to Qatar in exchange for Bergdahl. Each is in their
early-to-mid 40’s, and some were considered “likely to post a
threat to the US, its interests and allies,” according to
documents obtained by NPR’s Tom Bowman.

Mullah Mohammad Fazl has confessed to serving as the chief of
Staff of the Taliban Army who is wanted by the United Nations for
possible war crimes, including the murder of thousands of Shiite
Muslims, according to the Joint Task Force Guantanamo information
provided to Bowman. Also wanted in connection with the untold
Shiite deaths was Mullah Norullah Noori. The Joint Task Force
concluded that Noori had a close relationship with Supreme
Taliban Commander Mullah Muhammad Omar as well as senior members
of Al-Qaeda.

Perhaps the most notorious of the transferred detainees was
Khirullah Said Wali Khairkhwa. Khairkhwa, per the Task Force
documents, was directly associated with Osama Bin Laden, Supreme
Commander Omar, and represented the Taliban in a number of
meetings with Iranian officials who sought plans to attack US and
coalition forces in the Middle East.

“Detainee and his deputy were probably associated with a
militant training camp in Herat operated by deceased Al-Qaeda
commander (in Iraq) Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi,” the document
states. “Detainee was identified as a narcotics trafficker
and probably used his position and influences to become one of
the major opium drug lords in Western Afghanistan. Detainee
probably used profits from drugs to promote Taliban interests in
the area.”

Both Abdul Haq Wasiq, the former Taliban Deputy Minister of
Intelligence, and Muhammad Nabi, a “senior Taliban official
who served in multiple leadership roles,” are believed to
have fought against American forces after the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks while helping other leaders evade capture.